Nature Communications (Feb 2024)

Learning the intrinsic dynamics of spatio-temporal processes through Latent Dynamics Networks

  • Francesco Regazzoni,
  • Stefano Pagani,
  • Matteo Salvador,
  • Luca Dede’,
  • Alfio Quarteroni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45323-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Predicting the evolution of systems with spatio-temporal dynamics in response to external stimuli is essential for scientific progress. Traditional equations-based approaches leverage first principles through the numerical approximation of differential equations, thus demanding extensive computational resources. In contrast, data-driven approaches leverage deep learning algorithms to describe system evolution in low-dimensional spaces. We introduce an architecture, termed Latent Dynamics Network, capable of uncovering low-dimensional intrinsic dynamics in potentially non-Markovian systems. Latent Dynamics Networks automatically discover a low-dimensional manifold while learning the system dynamics, eliminating the need for training an auto-encoder and avoiding operations in the high-dimensional space. They predict the evolution, even in time-extrapolation scenarios, of space-dependent fields without relying on predetermined grids, thus enabling weight-sharing across query-points. Lightweight and easy-to-train, Latent Dynamics Networks demonstrate superior accuracy (normalized error 5 times smaller) in highly-nonlinear problems with significantly fewer trainable parameters (more than 10 times fewer) compared to state-of-the-art methods.